Inspite
of the vital role that the gas-driven internal combustion engine
played in the evolution of cars, it had one great drawback - the
engine had to be connected to a gas supply for re-fuelling. The
solution was an engine that ran on liquid fuels, which were available
more easily and readily transportable.
The turning point in the development of cars was the introduction
of the petrol engine in 1885, which started an entirely new
era and actually made the car a practical and safe proposition.
The cars produced in this period were more like the cars we see
today and thus began the era of the Modern Car.
1885
- Karl Benz
1886 - Gottlieb Daimler
1891 - Emile Levassor
1893 - Charles and Frank Duryea
1901 - Ransome Eli Olds
1908 - The Model T
1885
- Karl Benz
Karl Benz, born in 1844
was a son of an engine driver. Benz studied mechanical engineering,
and since his days of education was interested in the internal combustion
engine. His early working days at the time was however restricted
to the two-stroke engine, since the four-stroke engine was under
the Otto patent.
In 1885, by which time the Otto patent was no longer valid, Benz
developed a four-stroke internal combustion engine. This he attached
to a three-wheeled carriage, and thus was born the first of the
modern automobiles.
The car however was not an immediate commercial success, and it
was not till seven years and several improved versions later that
Benz's car became popular.
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1886
- Gottlieb Daimler
Gottlieb Daimler designed the
first modern petrol-driven internal combustion engine for the car.
Born in 1834, he was the son of a baker and the early education
he received was in the form of an apprenticeship with a gunsmith.
Daimler joined Otto and Langen in 1872, where he worked for a decade.
It during this time that he designed the first practical four-stroke
engine, which was then patented by Otto and Langen.
In 1882, Daimler left Otto and Langen, and was joined by Wilhelm
Maybach who was Chief Designer. Together they set up an independent
company, where they designed the first petrol engine in 1883. In
1885 he fitted the engine to a bicycle and created the prototype
of the present day motorcycle. A year later, in 1886, Daimler fitted
one of his engines to a horse-carriage and ran the created the first
four-wheeled motor car in history.
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1891
- Emile Levassor and Rene Panhard
Emile Levassor and Rene Panhard
(France) established the present design of cars - with the engine
in front.
Levassor and Panhard were partners in a woodworking machinery business. They were commissioned to build
Daimler engines by a solicitor name Edouard Sarazin, who held the
patent for France. Levassor initially experimented with the engine
in the rear, but later moved its position to the front of the car.
The classic design had an upright Daimler engine, a pedal-operated
clutch, change-speed gear box which drove the rear axle, front radiator
and wooden ladder-chassis. The design came to be known as the Systeme
Panhard, and was the forerunner of the modern cars.
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1893
- Charles and Frank Duryea
America's first automobile was built by Charles and Frank Duryea,
two bicycle makers. Charles spotted a gasoline engine at the 1886
Ohio State Fair and became convinced that an engine-driven carriage
could be built. The two brothers designed and built the car together,
working in a rented loft in Springfield, Massachusetts. After two
years of tinkering, Charles and Frank Duryea showed off their home
invention on the streets of Springfield, the first successful run
of an automobile in the U.S.
They were the first in the country to manufacture cars for sale,
and had built 13 cars by 1896.
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1901
- Ransome Eli Olds
Ransome Eli Olds was the first person to mass-produce cars to be
sold in the USA. He introduced the assembly line concept, and a
factory was set up in Detroit to manufacture several prototypes.
However the factory was burnt down before production could commence,
and only one prototype - the single cylinder buggy with a curved
dash remained. This little car - The Oldsmobile Gas Buggy - was highly successful and sold in large numbers.

In 1904, Ransom Olds left the company and started another which
manufactured "Reo" cars (derived from his initials). The
Reo, although similar to the Oldsmobile, did not receive the same
popularity.
The Oldsmobile Company prospered and was joined by Buick in 1908,
which subsequently led to the formation of the General Motors Group.
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1908
- The Model T
The Model T,
the first "people's car", was introduced by the Ford
Motor Company. Henry Ford had no professional engineering education,
but had a natural inclination towards mechanics. Earlier, the automobile
fell strictly in the purview of the rich, and it was Ford's ambition
to build a car for the masses.
Henry Ford used assembly-line production effectively to manufacture
his celebrated Model T, nicknamed the Tin Lizzie because it used
lightweight sheet steel for the body. Ford also introduced the moving
conveyor belt to assembly manufacturing, further accelerating production.
The production of the Model T continued till 1927, by which time,
a record number - more than 16.5 million - vehicles had been
produced.
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